logo
FemTech: will tech aimed solving womens' issues create new ones?

FemTech: will tech aimed solving womens' issues create new ones?

Irish Examiner01-08-2025
Though women constitute half of the world's population and make the majority of household healthcare spending decisions, FemTech — the use of female technology, products, and services to improve women's health and include them in clinical trials — is a recent phenomenon.
Despite old-age prejudices and a previous lack of funding and research, the FemTech industry is projected to grow to $97bn (€84bn) by 2035, thanks to a slate of new apps, products, and tech-focused solutions that tap in to the undeveloped women's health market.
This is important for three reasons. The first is that women-centric issues, like menstruation and menopause, have traditionally been left out of the research space.
Before 1993, women were rarely included in medical trials, and, according to a 2023 paper, women have accounted for less than 35% of participants in early-stage clinical trials.
The second is that a number of health conditions, such as heart disease, Alzheimer's and mental health, affect women and men differently.
Dr Tanya Mulcahy, director, Health Innovation Hub Ireland.
'The reason women were never included was because of the likes of the Thalidomide scandal; women of childbearing age were banned from trials,' says Dr Tanya Mulcahy, FemTech Ireland founder and Health Innovation Hub Ireland (HIHI) director.
'That was done to protect mothers and children, but it also resulted in companies not bothering with women's health solutions, because their product would have never been approved.'
The third is that women are regularly subjected to medical misogyny, a pervasive stigma associated with women's health. Women of all ages endure pain, disrespect, and subpar medical practices.
'Women have absolutely been gaslit as a result of medical misogyny,' according to GP and female health specialist Dr Máire Finn.
'I've regularly had patients tell me their GP didn't believe in menopause. I don't think it's intentional; it's more so a reflection of poor training and a lack of experience.'
The narrative on women's health research has been changed by a number of start-ups, many of which are founded on personal stories, like Justyna Strzeszynska and her company, Joii.
Joii Founder, Justyna Strzeszynska
Strzeszynska had previously worked in investments, yet her heavy periods routinely left her bedridden for a week. Upon being diagnosed with fibroids, something clicked: There is zero standardisation with how periods are tracked.
Joii attempts to counteract this with menstrual pads designed for period tracking, as well as an AI-powered app that measures and assesses menstrual flow: 'The current distinction for heavy periods is anything over 80ml, but that was dictated in 1966, so much has changed since then. People are getting periods earlier than ever, and if they don't have the information they need for the 15-minute appointment with their GP, they might never know what exactly is causing them these symptoms.'
Joii's product measures clot size, volume, colour, and symptoms to help women on their journey to seek correct and applicable medical advice: 'I was always asked how regularly I would change my pad. But that is so personal — some people change every hour, others don't. This will now allow people to feel empowered going into a doctor's office as they will be able to track exactly.'
CLOSING THE GAP
The FemTech wave is down to several factors.
According to HIHI's new report, exclusively seen by the Irish Examiner, an increased advocacy for funding and innovation in women's health has been seen by way of advancements in digital health, AI, as well as recent economic reports emphasising FemTech as a rapidly growing industry.
According to the World Economic Forum, closing the women's health gap could generate $1tn (€870bn) in annual global GDP by 2040.
'And yet, we're still only scratching the surface in finding out what happens in women compared to men,' Dr Mulcahy says.
'For example, hormone cycles impact lots of things; they can impact your cardiac health for the better. It would make anyone think: Could we figure out other things in the future?'
Among the high-potential areas for FemTech start-ups is menstrual health, something researchers at ETH Zürich considered when developing MenstruAI, a first-of-its-kind device that detects disease biomarkers through menstrual blood.
Like Joii, MenstruAI's technology is also built into a sanitary pad, but differs in that its sensors change colour if certain biomarkers are present.
'To date, menstrual blood has been regarded as waste,' said PhD student Lucas Dosnon, the 2024 study's lead author.
'And we are trying to show, much the same way that heart rate and temperature works with wearable sensors, that it is a valuable source of information.'
PhD student Lucas Dosnon
Dosnon, under Professor Inge K Herrmann, found menstrual blood to be a niche scentific gap unexplored by the medical industry, and a way to test blood non-invasively. 'It's comparable to venous blood,' he says.
'But it can also give us information about mucus, cell debris, and lots of other things, too.'
MenstruAI, which Dosnon hopes will be available to the public in 'two to five years', works similarly to a covid test, in that a visual marker is produced upon certain protein detection.
In time, the team hopes it will provide accessible solutions to detect everything from inflammation to tumour development, with diseases that are hard to screen early, such as ovarian cancer, front and centre of their minds.
With such high stakes at play, the consideration of false positives and negatives is central to their research.
'So far, we've reached key benchmarks, in terms of validating the fact that we can detect these proteins, measure their quantity, and properly test our technology with a centralised lab,' Dosnon says.
'But, of course, to fully validate the device, we need to undergo larger field studies and reach certain benchmarks for regulatory approval.
'We're also constantly discussing with designers and doctors how to communicate results in a way that doesn't generate more fear or stress. It's critical to get right.'
Dr Marie Finn GP.
CAUTION
Perhaps the greatest promise of FemTech right now is simply more dialogue around women's health, says Dr Finn.
However, like with any new change, personal caution should be exercised when using new products: 'Any improvement or work in this area has to be applauded. But something these companies have to be aware of is the sharing of sensitive medical data.
'That said, intimate details have been shared by people for the likes of 23andMe for years now, and people don't seem to care, but I would suggest proceeding with caution on what information you give, to whom you give it, what information you receive, and how to interpret it.
'The best way to use it, in my opinion, is to do so in tandem with a trusted medical person. Don't forget, we gain insights from some of this as well.'
The HIHI survey identified that the biggest challenges FemTech companies face relate to investment and regulatory requirements, a lack of specialised expertise, market access, and direct specialised access to clinicians and patients. As a result, they are calling on the Irish Government to include women's health research and FemTech innovation in the National Life Science Strategy, and for innovators, investors, and enablers to invest in the 51%.
'Investing in women's health research and innovation isn't just about equity — it's a catalyst for better healthcare for all,' Dr Mulcahy says.
'Conditions that affect women differently or disproportionately often hold the key to breakthroughs that benefit everyone. The start-ups and new technologies emerging in FemTech are addressing long-overlooked needs, unlocking insights that improve diagnostics, treatments, and system-wide efficiency.
'When we back these innovations, we're not just supporting women — we are supporting indigenous enterprise and we're building a healthier society.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Does femtech suggest so-called women's troubles might soon be taken as seriously as men's?
Does femtech suggest so-called women's troubles might soon be taken as seriously as men's?

Irish Times

time3 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Does femtech suggest so-called women's troubles might soon be taken as seriously as men's?

No, I tell my iPhone's autocorrect function, I really did mean femtech – not fintech. While one is crypto -focused, the other concerns the cryptic state of women's health , a market projected to be worth $97 billion (€83 billion) by 2030, according to a recent Irish report . The authors want to position Ireland as a leader in gendered health tech. In Ireland, 30 start-ups, many women-led, are innovating in areas such as endometriosis , polycystic ovary syndrome and menopause . We all know the phrase: 'If childbirth/periods/perimenopausal symptoms [insert women's health variable here] were a man's problem, it would have been solved by now.' Does femtech suggest so-called women's troubles might soon be taken as seriously as men's? As things stand, the history of gendered health tech is one of not enough data (and not enough women). Take the contraceptive pill, marketed in the 1960s after a decade of trials in Puerto Rico. Enovid was designed as a 'universal' contraceptive, a one-size-fits-all that ignored women's diverse bodies and needs. And who was the contraceptive pill really designed for? Its 21 days of hormones followed by a seven-day withdrawal bleed were a deliberate choice to mimic 'natural' menstrual cycles, making it more palatable, not just to users, but also to religious institutions. Dr John Rock, a devout Catholic who co-developed the contraceptive, acted in the misguided hope that the bleed would align the pill more closely with the rhythm method in the eyes of the church. READ MORE Healthcare in general suffers from what Catherine D'Ignazio, the author of Data Feminism, has called the gender data gap. Between the 1970s and the 1990s, an FDA (US Food and Drug Administration) guidance excluded women of childbearing age from early-stage clinical trials. The result is that many drugs were optimised by default for male bodies, with no research into how sex differences might affect drug metabolism, dosage or side effects. [ Femtech is about finally prioritising women's health in a world focused on men Opens in new window ] Then there's the speculum, a gynaecological instrument created with the user in mind – aka, a clinician, not the patient. These are just a few examples in a long history of health technologies designed for women without really considering how women and their bodies respond. Health tech has a habit of treating the user as a genderless everybody, which in practice usually means young, white, able-bodied, well-educated men, reflecting the designer's own demographic group. And it's not just health tech either: VR headsets, PPE, crash-test dummies, even musical instruments are built for male bodies. The problem isn't always a lack of data. Sometimes, it's too much of the wrong kind. The pill was tested in Puerto Rico because population control programmes were already in place, funded by US philanthropy. J Marrion Sims, known as the father of modern gynaecology, developed today's bivalve speculum while undertaking experimental surgeries on enslaved African women without consent or anaesthetic. In the mid-20th century, US venereal disease registries enabled the detention of women under public health laws. Henrietta Lacks, an African-American cancer patient at Johns Hopkins in the 1950s, had her cancer cells taken without her consent. They became the immortal HeLa cell line, used in countless medical breakthroughs. Her family received no compensation. In Ireland, the Magdalene laundries kept records of 'fallen women' for moral surveillance, not maternal care. Today, period and fertility-tracking apps raise similar concerns: in 2021, the Federal Trade Commission in the US charged the Flo app with sharing sensitive data with Facebook, Google and analytics firms, despite promising privacy. In the US, there are now fears such data could be subpoenaed in states where abortion is criminalised. The femtech gold rush promises to undo these wrongs, promising to keep central personalised design, diverse user input, and lived experience in product development. Ireland is already taking steps to ensure women's health innovation isn't left entirely to market forces. As the Femtech in Ireland: The Case for Prioritising Women's Health Research and Innovation report notes, women's health is 'a billion-dollar opportunity,' and 'smart economics', but it's also an area where public support has delivered real results. [ Ireland has potential to become global leader in femtech, report says Opens in new window ] Through programmes such as Femtech @ Health Innovation Hub Ireland, Horizon 2020, and Enterprise Ireland seed funding, dozens of Irish companies have been able to bring early-stage ideas into clinical testing, from Coroflo's real-time breast-milk monitor to IdentifyHer's wearable menopause sensor. This public backing centres women's health in national innovation strategy. It proves the viability of solutions for historically under-researched conditions. But once companies move from research and prototyping to a scaled product, private capital becomes essential. Coroflo raised $2.8 million from private investors; IdentifyHer is currently seeking pre-seed funding. Venture capital can accelerate growth, but as tech writer Edward Ongweso argues, it doesn't necessarily fund what's best, socially or holistically, raising questions about what values get built into women's health tech and who will be able to afford new advances. Privacy is another concern. In 2012, Target made headlines for predicting a teenager's pregnancy based on her purchasing data, sending her baby-product offers before she had told her family. Pregnancy data is extremely lucrative – worth two or three times that of a 'general' consumer – because it signals future spending. Menopause, long under-researched, is another rich data set, flagging future health needs and spending patterns. Much of the data gathered by femtech companies is proprietary, giving whoever collects it a first-mover advantage when it comes to developing drugs, therapies or insurance products. Proprietary data can mean commercial incentives, with no benefit to those being studied, from resale to insurers to invasive advertising (women over 35 are already plagued by ads for mushroom and flax supplements on Instagram). And, as any open-source advocate will tell you, it also means less public benefit; valuable health insights aren't always shared if they form part of a company's intellectual property. Ireland has already shown that sustained, targeted public support can lead to meaningful innovation in women's health. The challenge now is to keep momentum beyond the start-up phase, so that femtech in Ireland doesn't just mirror short-term venture capital cycles, but grows into a genuine revolution in women's care.

FemTech support needed to address health inequities
FemTech support needed to address health inequities

RTÉ News​

time07-08-2025

  • RTÉ News​

FemTech support needed to address health inequities

A new report 'FemTech in Ireland' has identified significant opportunities for Ireland to become a global leader in technology, research, and innovation focused on women's health. It found FemTech attracts more female entrepreneurs, and explores how improved support for women's health innovation could address health inequities. FemTech is the term used to describe products and technology services aimed at addressing women's health issues. "One of the things that has happened in the last couple of years is there's a realisation that for a number of historical reasons, including excluding women from clinical trials, that we need to do more research into conditions that affect women only," said Dr Tanya Mulcahy, Director of Health Innovation Hub Ireland and founder of FemTech Ireland Dr Tanya Mulcahy. "We've also found that there are conditions that affect women differently to men, but we haven't done the research to understand that. "If we do that, we'll find more clues to creating better solutions for both women and men. "But importantly, there are so many conditions that affect women that we really need to address, and we haven't. Globally, FemTech is projected to exceed €60 billion by 2027—but only a small fraction of health research funding and investment currently targets female-specific health conditions. The sector attracts more female entrepreneurs with 75% of FemTech companies being founded by women. "The women that come into us with new ideas and new solutions, they're passionate about this because they've experienced conditions themselves, realise there's no solutions out there, or they know someone, a family member that's experienced something that's affected them," said Dr Mulcahy. The report is based on two years of work through FemTech at the Health Innovation Hub Ireland, the first Irish programme focused on supporting innovation in women's health. Since launching in 2022, the initiative has supported over 30 Irish start-ups developing products to improve women's health—from wearable tech to track menopause symptoms, to smarter devices for pelvic health and fertility. The report also has specific calls to action to drive the growth and development of the FemTech sector in Ireland. · Specific funding for research into women's health conditions; · More support for Irish start-ups developing women's health solutions; · A national FemTech space where innovators can work with patients and doctors; · Changes to how medical research is done, to include and understand women better. "We are witnessing extraordinary advances in healthcare technology and innovation" said Professor John R Higgins, PI of Health Innovation Hub Ireland and Professor of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, University College Cork and Cork University Maternity Hospital. "In women's health however, a longstanding gap in research has meant that these innovations have not always translated into meaningful solutions," said Prof Higgins. "This gap in evidence directly impacts the development of technologies. Now is the time to bridge that divide—with focused funding, targeted research, and innovation supports."

Femtech is about finally prioritising women's health in a world focused on men
Femtech is about finally prioritising women's health in a world focused on men

Irish Times

time07-08-2025

  • Irish Times

Femtech is about finally prioritising women's health in a world focused on men

Unless you were paying close attention, you might have missed a movement gaining momentum in the tech scene. It is not about artificial intelligence , large language models or a super intelligence that is apparently going to make our lives easier. We are talking about femtech – the development of innovative products and services designed to solve issues that primarily or disproportionately affect women. Technology for women used to mean something very different. This was highlighted for me a few years ago when a website that had pitched itself as a women's tech site for several years suddenly switched to being a generic technology publication, with a 'gadgets for girls' section tacked on. In addition to feeling more than a little patronising to its former readers, the gadgets in question were mainly 'sensual' massagers and sex toys. READ MORE Thankfully, that narrow view of what women want and need from technology has been edged out, to be replaced with more practical solutions. If reading about women's menstrual cycles , the menopause or breastfeeding makes you squeamish, you might want to avert your eyes now. Femtech is becoming a hot topic. From period trackers (that don't sell your data) and menopause products such as Peri's wearable vest to Coroflo's breastfeeding monitor and OnaWave's technology to help diagnose and treat pelvic conditions, the sector has seen a rise in the number of entrepreneurs interested in bringing innovation to women's health. We are becoming more open about health issues too. People talk about periods and menstrual cycles, rather than euphemistically referring to something that affects around half the population as 'women's troubles'. Companies seem to have finally realised that menopause (and perimenopause before it) is a real condition that affects almost half the workforce and is worthy of workplace support. And it could bring a whole new industry to Ireland. A new report from Health Innovation Hub Ireland and the Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology at University College Cork has laid out just how beneficial the femtech movement could be to Ireland. The report, Femtech in Ireland, claims that Ireland could position itself as a leader in femtech, the global market for which is expected to reach $97 billion by 2030. You might ask why there is the need for femtech, rather than just investing in health tech and targeting a wider audience But there is more to it than that. Closing the women's health gap, the report says, could boost the global economy by $1 trillion each year by 2040. That is before you get to the new medical treatments and interventions it could unlock for the wider population, not just women. Innovation in women's health remains underfunded. But the people supporting the femtech movement in Ireland know how to hook their audience – appeal to the money-making side of things. While femtech means potentially better healthcare for women, which is to be applauded, there is also money to be made. There are few industries out there that have sprung up simply because they will make things better for the human race, with zero monetary reward for those who come up with the goods. There have been efforts to address this. In 2022, Health Innovation Hub Ireland set up a femtech hub with the goal of supporting start-ups and innovators. It has succeeded in supporting more than 30 companies over the past two years and created a network to support women's health innovation. You might ask why there is the need for femtech, rather than just investing in health tech and targeting a wider audience. A glance through the book Invisible Women by Caroline Criado-Perez will make it clearer, laying out the many ways women have been forgotten about when it comes to designing products, services and guidelines that are supposed to protect them. Smartphones designed for a typical hand size come to mind. So too, car-safety tests carried out for years with the 'typical' male dummy. There is no shortage of protective equipment designed for male bodies, with women an afterthought. Even in the health sector, things have traditionally skewed to the male experience. Heart attacks present differently in women, but much of the literature that talks about 'typical' symptoms really means typical for men. Clinical trials were, for years, biased towards men, with results that could ultimately put women at risk because it led to treatments that had not been tested on female bodies. Big companies are recognising the potential here, regardless of their motivation for doing so In fact, as the femtech report highlights, women were not routinely included in clinical trials until the 1990s, when the US mandated that they must be. Why? Because of our pesky hormones, which fluctuated and could mess things up, or the risk to pregnancy. Woman are 51 per cent of the population. They make up 48 per cent of the labour force. It is in everyone's interests that technology geared towards dealing with women's issues are encouraged. And not just by paying lip service at best, or being downright patronising at worst, making something in pink or sparkly purple so it will appeal to women. We need real, effective research and technology born from it. Some companies have got the memo. Finnish company Oura has created a ring that measures everything from heart rate and blood oxygen to movement, interpreting the data into usable insights that can help you improve your health. It has developed an ovulation detection algorithm, a fertile window indicator for women and taken part in a research study that analyses biobehavioural changes during pregnancy. Similarly, Whoop, Garmin, Apple and Samsung all offer cycle tracking for people who use their wearables. Big companies are recognising the potential here, regardless of their motivation for doing so. It is now time for the Government and State agencies to put their money where their mouth is. As the report urges, invest in the 51 per cent. Women, and all of us, deserve better.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store